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Ohio Jewish chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1971-08-19

Ohio Jewish Chronicle. (Columbus, Ohio), 1971-08-19, page 01

•VOL.49NO.3It
AUGUST 19.1971-AV 28
m4 hmnh Mr«li
U.S. Extending Efforts Toward Arranging Part Suez Settlement
MR. & MRS. JACK RESLER
Reslers To Be Honored At Annual UJFC Meet Sept. 12
Mr. and Mrs. Jack S. Resler will receive; the Community Distinguished Service Award at the Annual ' Meeting ofthe United Jewish Fund and Council, Sunday , evening, Sept. 12, 8 p.m. at Temple Israel.
This coveted award, which has been presented only four tunes in the 44 year history of the UJFC, will be presented to the Reslers for their many contributions to the Iif e bf the general and the Jewish community over the past years. Past recipients of the award are Mr. Robert Schiff, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Gordon and Mr. Samuel M. Melton.
Mr. Resler is Secretary of the UJFC, and. has be^n a member of its Board' of Trustees for many years. Mr. Resler also serves oii the Board of the UJFC. He iS a Fellow of Brandeis University, having donated the Cancer Research Clinic at Brandeis. Mrs. Resler is a past president of the Columbus Women's 9"'"" mittee for Brandeis.
Honorary Life President of Temple Israel, following bis terih as President from 1954 to 1958, Mr. Resler made possible the grounds for the building of the present Temple. He also donated the land for the parking lot adjoining the OSU Hiitel Foundation, and has been a benefactor of Hillel, and a member of its National ' Commission, for many years.
Chairman of the Chip- Kentucky Regional ^oard of the Anti-Defamation League, IVIr. Resler and his wife are both recipients of the Society of Fellows of A.D.L. In 1967 he received the Sanford I. Lakin Award of Zi(Hi Lodge No. 62, aiicl is also.' the recipient ofthe Distinguished Communal Service Award and the President's Medal fdr Humanitarian Service of National B'nai B'rith. He is Vice President of the Leo N. Levi Memorial Hospital at Hot Springs, Ark., and is on the Board of the Union of American Hebrew
Congregations. Both Mr. and Mrs. Resler are members of the Ohio State University's Presidents' Club, which was started at his instigation and suggestion. He has been a generous supporter of all local agencies and causes, and serves on the boards of many of the beneficiary agencies of the UJFC. A graduate of Ohio State University, Mr. Resler is President of the Hercules Trouser Company, and a director of the First State Bank and Trust Company. He is a Founder of the HUC- Zionsville Summer Camp for NIFTY AND OFTY young people.
Mrs. Resler is a past chairman of the Women's Division of the UJFC and served on the National Women's Board of the United Jewish Appeal. She is a member of many local organizations, and active on the boards of several, in the general as well as in the Jewish community. Organizer of Fellowship Church, she was also one of the founders of Pennies
ICONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
(Copyright, 1971, JTA, Inc.)
WASHINGTON (JTA) — State Department officials are preparing a formula to extend efforts by the United States towards arranging a ' partial settlement bet¬ ween Israel and Egypt that could lead to ^ reopening of thie Suez C!anal, according to diplomatic sources. here. Despite reliable reports that Assistant Secretary of State Joseph J. Sisco received only slight encouragement from Israeli officials in his talks with them about the canal reopening, sources reported that the Depart¬ ment is anxious to preserve its initiative regarding the reopening of the canal. A major reason for t 3 for-, mula, sources noted, is to resist demands in the United Nations General Assembly, convening in New York Sept. 21 for Ambassador Gunnar V- Jarring to resume his mission towards a full set¬ tlement based on Security Council Resolution 242. Strong condemnatim of Israel from most of t^e countries repriesented in the General Assembly is ex- . pected under the leadership
01 tne Kioviet Union, the Arab states and France. The State Department was said not tp' be concerned by the ex¬ pected resolutions con¬ cerning Israel. One diplomatic source said, in fact, that the Americans would welcome the on¬ slaught against Israel to help weaken Israel's resistance against an interim set¬ tlement favoring Egypt.
However, this source said, the U.S. delegation, on the explicit instructions of President Nixon will fight any attempt by the UN to impose sanctions on Israel, after the language of Resolution 242, or allow an opening for the Soviet Union to employ direct military measures against Israel. In effect, the source stated, the current U.S. view is to at¬
tempt to expand and strengthen the cease-fire arrangement, now into its second year, and create conditions to facilitate moves towards an over-all settlement. An effort towards an over-all set¬ tlement at present would be doomed to failure since Egypt and Israel are too far apart for the broad formula
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 41
Tale Of Three Cities - Young Leadership Theme
Invitations were in the mail this week for the 1971 Series of the United Jewish Fund and Council Young Leadership Developinent Program Committee. Now in its 16th year the Develop¬ ment Series concerns itself with programs representmg the major thrusts in Jewish life, as well as an un¬ derstanding of the operational side of the community's agencies which benefit from the UJFC. Mrs. Ronald Rudolph is Chairman of the' 1971 Committee. Serving with her as Co- Chairman is Ron Solove. Members of the Planning Committee include William
No Kennedy Endorsement On Senate Bill Causes Dismay
SAN FRANCISCO (JTA) — The National Union of (Councils for Soviet Jews, representing 13 chapters across the country, ex¬ pressed its "dismay" over Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's not having endorsed the Senate bill for 30,000 emergency visas for Soviet Jews, as 34 of his colleagues already have. Harold B.
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NEW YORK (WNS)~Twenty Jews in Kiev and Vilna have been jailed or fined on charges of "hooliganism" for attempting to commetriorikte Tisha b'Av by visiting Jewish mass graves. The 10 Kiev Jews received 15 day jail sentences. The Jews in Vilna were given a choice of similar terms or fines.
RAMAT OAN (WNS)—Some IOO newly arrived Soviet Jews studying at Bar-Ilaii University, are being helped lo "catch up" with the Jewish cultural and' religious heritage by a special program instituted by the school. The immigrants, whose knowledge of Hebrew is limited, are learning about the Bible and Talmud through Russian translations provided by. the University. ' '
TEL AVIV (WN.S)—Mordecai Louk, the Moroccan born Israeli "man in the trunk" who was sentenced to a lO-year prison term for spying for Egypt was released after serving six years, Louk was arrested in Rome in November, 1964 after being fouiicl drugged and lied in a "diplomatic mail" trunk eriroute to Cairo. He returned to Israel where he was tried and convicted of espionage on behalf of Egypt. The court declared that Egypt had become dissatisfied with Louk and had decided to bring him lo Cairo,
Light, vice chairman of the National Union and chair¬ man of the Bay Area Council for Soviet Jewry, advised the Massachusetts Democrat in a telegram: "General statements of sympathy for Soviet Jews or resolutions lo United Nations are no longer sufficient. Legislative action by United States government opening the gates to Soviet Jews is necessary. Please help." Last Thursday, following a sit-in at his Washington offices by members of the Jewish Defense League, Kennedy promised to act for the release of five Jews facing trial in Sverdlovsk on charges of "anti-Soviet activity." Light also reported that in a private conversation Monday with Bayard Rustin, the black civil rights leader told him; "I think that the Spyiet Union has behaved badly toward its Jews, but I think .vwe, the United States, have behaved equally badly. I ..want to know why President Nixon has not gone to the United Nations, why he has not himself denounced what is happening, why he has not called on other nations to do ¦so.'The'one thing he ought tp do is to say: "If there are .lews who want to come to America, let them come. I will sec to it that they are permitted in."
Friedman, Mrs. Jerry Kroos, Hal Leiner, Mark Mirken, Mr. and Mrs. Jef¬ frey Paine, Lee Pesakoff, Mrs. Robert Rothman, and Mrs. Marshall Stewart.
Ilieme for the 1971 Series is "A Tale of Three Cities — Columbus — Moscow — Jerusalem," and each session covers subjects of interest and vital concern to the survival of'Jewish life in these three centers where our people livk First Session will be an Orientation, an introduction to the agencies and institutions which make for Jewish survival and a viable Jewish community in Columbus; it will be held on Tuesday evening, September 14, at 8 p.m, at the Esther C. Melton Community Services Building. Discussion leader will be Ben M. Mandelkorn, Executive Director of the United Jewish Fund smd Council, Chairman for the evening will- be Mrs. Rudolph, and in charge of refreshments will be Mrs. Ronald Solove.
Second Session (Chapter I in the Tale of Three Cities) will be on Israel and the Middle East. Discussion leader will be Gordon B. Zacks, Past Chairman of the Young Leadership Cabinet of
MRS. RONALD RUDOLPH
the United Jewish Appeal, and incoming Chairman of the 1972 Campaign of the United Jewish Fund and Council. It wiU be held on Tuesday evening, October 14, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kauffinah, 465 North Drexel Avenue. Chairman will be Hal Leiner. Mrs. Jerry Kroos is in charge of the social hour which will follow the meeting. Mr. Zacks will be going to Israel on Aug. 29, to participate in the Prime Minister's Mission, and in the course of the coming year will be making several other trips to Israel. He will
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 41
Israeli Conscientious Qbjectors Retuni Draft Cards To Dayan
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Four Israeli conscientious pbjeclors, who published a letter to. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan refusing military seryice, told a group of newsmen here that while other Israeli yputh^ had declined service with no effort at publicity, they had sought by their public action to grouse public opinion in Israel on the war issue. The four — three young meh and one girl — have dates .for call-up from August through November, the resistors asserted that war and oc¬ cupation of conquered .^reas were generally ordered' by "per.sons who stand to gain by them." 'They have their names as Mi.ss irit Yaacobi, IleuhCn Lc.s.smann and. Dov (iall, all of Jerusalem, and
uiora Neumann Tel Aviv. All are high. school graduates * andat least two of them from well-to-do families.
Declaring they knew they were subject to maximum I .Vyear? prison terms. Gall said: "We do not want to .' become oppressors and we do not want to die as op¬ pressors." Although Israel has no law on conscientious objectors, war resistors are usually exempted from ^ .military seryicP'on "medical'' grounds." A 19-ycar-old youth sitting with the four ¦ COs said that he himself had obtained such deferment and that he knew of many others. Gall told of a visit .to the (Jaza .Strip, where he saw "the fear and hulriKl in the eyes of the population of
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•VOL.49NO.3It
AUGUST 19.1971-AV 28
m4 hmnh Mr«li
U.S. Extending Efforts Toward Arranging Part Suez Settlement
MR. & MRS. JACK RESLER
Reslers To Be Honored At Annual UJFC Meet Sept. 12
Mr. and Mrs. Jack S. Resler will receive; the Community Distinguished Service Award at the Annual ' Meeting ofthe United Jewish Fund and Council, Sunday , evening, Sept. 12, 8 p.m. at Temple Israel.
This coveted award, which has been presented only four tunes in the 44 year history of the UJFC, will be presented to the Reslers for their many contributions to the Iif e bf the general and the Jewish community over the past years. Past recipients of the award are Mr. Robert Schiff, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Gordon and Mr. Samuel M. Melton.
Mr. Resler is Secretary of the UJFC, and. has be^n a member of its Board' of Trustees for many years. Mr. Resler also serves oii the Board of the UJFC. He iS a Fellow of Brandeis University, having donated the Cancer Research Clinic at Brandeis. Mrs. Resler is a past president of the Columbus Women's 9"'"" mittee for Brandeis.
Honorary Life President of Temple Israel, following bis terih as President from 1954 to 1958, Mr. Resler made possible the grounds for the building of the present Temple. He also donated the land for the parking lot adjoining the OSU Hiitel Foundation, and has been a benefactor of Hillel, and a member of its National ' Commission, for many years.
Chairman of the Chip- Kentucky Regional ^oard of the Anti-Defamation League, IVIr. Resler and his wife are both recipients of the Society of Fellows of A.D.L. In 1967 he received the Sanford I. Lakin Award of Zi(Hi Lodge No. 62, aiicl is also.' the recipient ofthe Distinguished Communal Service Award and the President's Medal fdr Humanitarian Service of National B'nai B'rith. He is Vice President of the Leo N. Levi Memorial Hospital at Hot Springs, Ark., and is on the Board of the Union of American Hebrew
Congregations. Both Mr. and Mrs. Resler are members of the Ohio State University's Presidents' Club, which was started at his instigation and suggestion. He has been a generous supporter of all local agencies and causes, and serves on the boards of many of the beneficiary agencies of the UJFC. A graduate of Ohio State University, Mr. Resler is President of the Hercules Trouser Company, and a director of the First State Bank and Trust Company. He is a Founder of the HUC- Zionsville Summer Camp for NIFTY AND OFTY young people.
Mrs. Resler is a past chairman of the Women's Division of the UJFC and served on the National Women's Board of the United Jewish Appeal. She is a member of many local organizations, and active on the boards of several, in the general as well as in the Jewish community. Organizer of Fellowship Church, she was also one of the founders of Pennies
ICONTINUED ON PAGE 4)
(Copyright, 1971, JTA, Inc.)
WASHINGTON (JTA) — State Department officials are preparing a formula to extend efforts by the United States towards arranging a ' partial settlement bet¬ ween Israel and Egypt that could lead to ^ reopening of thie Suez C!anal, according to diplomatic sources. here. Despite reliable reports that Assistant Secretary of State Joseph J. Sisco received only slight encouragement from Israeli officials in his talks with them about the canal reopening, sources reported that the Depart¬ ment is anxious to preserve its initiative regarding the reopening of the canal. A major reason for t 3 for-, mula, sources noted, is to resist demands in the United Nations General Assembly, convening in New York Sept. 21 for Ambassador Gunnar V- Jarring to resume his mission towards a full set¬ tlement based on Security Council Resolution 242. Strong condemnatim of Israel from most of t^e countries repriesented in the General Assembly is ex- . pected under the leadership
01 tne Kioviet Union, the Arab states and France. The State Department was said not tp' be concerned by the ex¬ pected resolutions con¬ cerning Israel. One diplomatic source said, in fact, that the Americans would welcome the on¬ slaught against Israel to help weaken Israel's resistance against an interim set¬ tlement favoring Egypt.
However, this source said, the U.S. delegation, on the explicit instructions of President Nixon will fight any attempt by the UN to impose sanctions on Israel, after the language of Resolution 242, or allow an opening for the Soviet Union to employ direct military measures against Israel. In effect, the source stated, the current U.S. view is to at¬
tempt to expand and strengthen the cease-fire arrangement, now into its second year, and create conditions to facilitate moves towards an over-all settlement. An effort towards an over-all set¬ tlement at present would be doomed to failure since Egypt and Israel are too far apart for the broad formula
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 41
Tale Of Three Cities - Young Leadership Theme
Invitations were in the mail this week for the 1971 Series of the United Jewish Fund and Council Young Leadership Developinent Program Committee. Now in its 16th year the Develop¬ ment Series concerns itself with programs representmg the major thrusts in Jewish life, as well as an un¬ derstanding of the operational side of the community's agencies which benefit from the UJFC. Mrs. Ronald Rudolph is Chairman of the' 1971 Committee. Serving with her as Co- Chairman is Ron Solove. Members of the Planning Committee include William
No Kennedy Endorsement On Senate Bill Causes Dismay
SAN FRANCISCO (JTA) — The National Union of (Councils for Soviet Jews, representing 13 chapters across the country, ex¬ pressed its "dismay" over Sen. Edward M. Kennedy's not having endorsed the Senate bill for 30,000 emergency visas for Soviet Jews, as 34 of his colleagues already have. Harold B.
1, , -it
r V
5
'K'l
.. >^'-^ ^
* 5
J.
NEW YORK (WNS)~Twenty Jews in Kiev and Vilna have been jailed or fined on charges of "hooliganism" for attempting to commetriorikte Tisha b'Av by visiting Jewish mass graves. The 10 Kiev Jews received 15 day jail sentences. The Jews in Vilna were given a choice of similar terms or fines.
RAMAT OAN (WNS)—Some IOO newly arrived Soviet Jews studying at Bar-Ilaii University, are being helped lo "catch up" with the Jewish cultural and' religious heritage by a special program instituted by the school. The immigrants, whose knowledge of Hebrew is limited, are learning about the Bible and Talmud through Russian translations provided by. the University. ' '
TEL AVIV (WN.S)—Mordecai Louk, the Moroccan born Israeli "man in the trunk" who was sentenced to a lO-year prison term for spying for Egypt was released after serving six years, Louk was arrested in Rome in November, 1964 after being fouiicl drugged and lied in a "diplomatic mail" trunk eriroute to Cairo. He returned to Israel where he was tried and convicted of espionage on behalf of Egypt. The court declared that Egypt had become dissatisfied with Louk and had decided to bring him lo Cairo,
Light, vice chairman of the National Union and chair¬ man of the Bay Area Council for Soviet Jewry, advised the Massachusetts Democrat in a telegram: "General statements of sympathy for Soviet Jews or resolutions lo United Nations are no longer sufficient. Legislative action by United States government opening the gates to Soviet Jews is necessary. Please help." Last Thursday, following a sit-in at his Washington offices by members of the Jewish Defense League, Kennedy promised to act for the release of five Jews facing trial in Sverdlovsk on charges of "anti-Soviet activity." Light also reported that in a private conversation Monday with Bayard Rustin, the black civil rights leader told him; "I think that the Spyiet Union has behaved badly toward its Jews, but I think .vwe, the United States, have behaved equally badly. I ..want to know why President Nixon has not gone to the United Nations, why he has not himself denounced what is happening, why he has not called on other nations to do ¦so.'The'one thing he ought tp do is to say: "If there are .lews who want to come to America, let them come. I will sec to it that they are permitted in."
Friedman, Mrs. Jerry Kroos, Hal Leiner, Mark Mirken, Mr. and Mrs. Jef¬ frey Paine, Lee Pesakoff, Mrs. Robert Rothman, and Mrs. Marshall Stewart.
Ilieme for the 1971 Series is "A Tale of Three Cities — Columbus — Moscow — Jerusalem," and each session covers subjects of interest and vital concern to the survival of'Jewish life in these three centers where our people livk First Session will be an Orientation, an introduction to the agencies and institutions which make for Jewish survival and a viable Jewish community in Columbus; it will be held on Tuesday evening, September 14, at 8 p.m, at the Esther C. Melton Community Services Building. Discussion leader will be Ben M. Mandelkorn, Executive Director of the United Jewish Fund smd Council, Chairman for the evening will- be Mrs. Rudolph, and in charge of refreshments will be Mrs. Ronald Solove.
Second Session (Chapter I in the Tale of Three Cities) will be on Israel and the Middle East. Discussion leader will be Gordon B. Zacks, Past Chairman of the Young Leadership Cabinet of
MRS. RONALD RUDOLPH
the United Jewish Appeal, and incoming Chairman of the 1972 Campaign of the United Jewish Fund and Council. It wiU be held on Tuesday evening, October 14, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kauffinah, 465 North Drexel Avenue. Chairman will be Hal Leiner. Mrs. Jerry Kroos is in charge of the social hour which will follow the meeting. Mr. Zacks will be going to Israel on Aug. 29, to participate in the Prime Minister's Mission, and in the course of the coming year will be making several other trips to Israel. He will
(CONTINUED ON PAGE 41
Israeli Conscientious Qbjectors Retuni Draft Cards To Dayan
JERUSALEM (JTA) — Four Israeli conscientious pbjeclors, who published a letter to. Defense Minister Moshe Dayan refusing military seryice, told a group of newsmen here that while other Israeli yputh^ had declined service with no effort at publicity, they had sought by their public action to grouse public opinion in Israel on the war issue. The four — three young meh and one girl — have dates .for call-up from August through November, the resistors asserted that war and oc¬ cupation of conquered .^reas were generally ordered' by "per.sons who stand to gain by them." 'They have their names as Mi.ss irit Yaacobi, IleuhCn Lc.s.smann and. Dov (iall, all of Jerusalem, and
uiora Neumann Tel Aviv. All are high. school graduates * andat least two of them from well-to-do families.
Declaring they knew they were subject to maximum I .Vyear? prison terms. Gall said: "We do not want to .' become oppressors and we do not want to die as op¬ pressors." Although Israel has no law on conscientious objectors, war resistors are usually exempted from ^ .military seryicP'on "medical'' grounds." A 19-ycar-old youth sitting with the four ¦ COs said that he himself had obtained such deferment and that he knew of many others. Gall told of a visit .to the (Jaza .Strip, where he saw "the fear and hulriKl in the eyes of the population of
irONIINUPf) ON l'rt